Introduction

I must admit that at first I wasn't too excited when Nikon announced the AF-S 105mm f/1.4E ED. Those specs, f/1.4 at 105mm, that really sounded a bit too ambitious. Probably a lens focused on 'character' rather than performance, a blown-up tele version of the bokehlicious AF-S 58/1.4. Even the high price (currently retailing for around 2300 EUR) fitted this initial perception.

Seeing the MTF charts published by Nikon changed that impression, though. And first reviews and early adopters confirmed that Nikon obviously didn't add just another f/1.4 to their portfolio, but in fact delivered a very capable lens.

So, let's have a look how the lens performs in our test lab.

Let's start with the less exciting stuff and talk about some specs and build quality first. If you've handled any of the current Nikkor f/1.4 primes, especially the AF-S 58/1.4 or the AF-S 85/1.4, the 105mm lens will look very familiar at first. However, that doesn't prepare you well for the dimension and weight of it. For a short tele prime, it is huge and heavy.

Apart from size and weight, it is indeed very similar to it's closest siblings, which means it comes with an outer barrel that might be either high-end plastic or a magnesium alloy (which still feels like plastic), unfortunately the official specs don't mention the material used. However, Nikon claims the lens is sealed to resist dust and moisture.

There is one feature that sets it apart from the other Gold Ring f/1.4 primes: it's the first lens of that group to feature an electronically controlled aperture (thus the 'E' designation in its name). So far, Nikon restricted this modern aperture variant to it's high end long primes, the PC-E tilt shift lenses and the recently announced 70-200/2.8E VR.